Vault of Delights guide

Dice Towers, Dice, and Tabletop Accessories Guide

Accessories often sell best when they solve a very specific table problem. The shopper usually knows whether they want a dice tower, a tracker, a set of dice, or a finishing touch for the setup.

Why this matters

That is why a dedicated accessories lane matters. It keeps add-on products visible without forcing them to compete directly with miniatures, collectibles, or sealed card products.

It also helps the store feel more complete. A real hobby shop should make it easy to find the extras that improve play and presentation.

What to look for

  • Separate dice, towers, and accessory helpers into easy-to-scan groups.
  • Use product names that sound like retail products, not backend imports.
  • Think about giftability and desk-display value for standout accessory pieces.
  • Support impulse purchases with a clear accessory lane from the header.

Where to start in Vault of Delights

Vault of Delights keeps accessories in their own top-level lane so shoppers can jump straight into table-improvement items.

This is especially useful for gift buyers and returning customers who already know the exact accessory type they need.

Common questions

Why do dice towers deserve a separate category?

Because shoppers looking for a tower usually have a different intent from people browsing dice sets or small tabletop add-ons.

Are accessories good add-on products?

Yes. Accessories often work as natural add-ons, gifts, and quick-win purchases when they are categorized clearly.

Why Vault of Delights keeps this easier

Vault of Delights is being organized around how hobby shoppers actually browse: by tabletop role, display style, game line, accessory use, and download intent. That makes discovery faster for first-time visitors and cleaner for repeat customers.